Household and business fuel bills are set to rise significantly as oil’s surge past $91 a barrel signals the beginning of what analysts fear could be a prolonged period of elevated energy prices. The more than 25% weekly gain in Brent crude — the biggest since the Covid-19 pandemic — triggered by the Iran conflict is already being felt in financial markets, and the downstream effects on fuel prices, heating bills, and transport costs will follow in the weeks and months ahead.
The mechanics of the price transmission from crude oil to consumer energy bills are well understood but take time to play out. Petrol and diesel prices at the pump typically respond to crude price changes within days or weeks. Gas and electricity bills, which depend on a more complex mix of wholesale prices, distribution costs, and government levies, take longer. But a 25% spike in crude oil is of sufficient magnitude to affect all of these categories substantially.
The drivers of the crude price surge are deeply worrying because they suggest the elevated prices could persist. Kuwait has been forced to cut production at fields running out of storage, and Saudi Arabia and the UAE face the same situation within 20 days. With the Strait of Hormuz effectively closed to normal traffic, the Gulf’s oil export capacity is severely constrained. Qatar’s LNG export infrastructure has been damaged, disrupting about 20% of global LNG supply.
Qatar’s energy minister has warned of an escalation rather than a resolution: continued conflict could push all Gulf exporters to halt production and send oil to $150 a barrel. At that price, the impact on consumer energy bills would be severe. European gas prices are already at three-year highs, and the competition between European and Asian LNG buyers could push them higher still.
For consumers and businesses already carrying the financial scars of the post-Covid inflation surge, the prospect of another energy-driven cost increase is deeply concerning. Financial markets have already registered the alarm — with stocks falling, bond yields surging, and rate cut hopes collapsing. Fuel bills are the most direct point at which this week’s extraordinary market events will touch the lives of ordinary people, and the pain is coming.